International Friendly: Rep of Ireland 1 Turkey 2

Republic of Ireland's preparations for UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying got off to an underwhelming start in a 2-1 home loss to Turkey on Sunday.

The two sides produced a frenetic start in front of a sparse crowd at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin and, although Ireland fell behind after just 17 minutes, Martin O'Neill's men showed glimpses of what they were capable of.

Ahmet Ilhan Ozek broke the deadlock for the visitors, sending a bullet header beyond debutant Rob Elliot before the hosts took control, forcing Onur Kivrak into a string of impressive saves.

Turkey ultimately doubled their lead with 15 minutes to go, as Tarik Camdal found the roof of the net, but Jonathan Walters pulled one back a few moments later to ensure an intriguing finish.

Ireland made a lacklustre start and allowed Turkey two chances inside the first minute. Mevlut Erding tested Elliot from distance, before Ozek sent a flicked effort over the crossbar.

The tie's blistering start continued and Ireland appeared unlucky not to be awarded a fourth-minute penalty as Omer Toprak went unpunished after clumsily bringing down Shane Long inside the area.

Ireland were gradually growing in stature and Kivrak brilliantly saved a header from Long in the 14th minute, before John O'Shea's rebound was cleared off the line by Caner Erkin.

Turkey made the most of that let-off and took the lead three minutes later, as Ozek diverted Gokhan Gonul's right-wing cross into the bottom-right corner with a precise header.

Fatih Terim's side continued to look dangerous in attack, but susceptible at the back as the first half progressed.

The visitors' full-backs were continuously targeted by Ireland and Kivrak pulled off another fine stop to deny James McClean in the 36th minute, after Aiden McGeady had glided past Gonul to send in a cross.

Proceedings were significantly more disjointed after the break, with half-time seemingly affecting Ireland's free-flowing football from the first half.

Nevertheless, the Irish continued to be the brighter side going forward, with the visitors' only real threat proving to be Hakan Calhanoglu, but Elliot confidently plucked the Hamburg man's deliveries out of the air on more than one occasion.

Turkey thought they had put the match beyond any doubt in the 75th minute as Camdal received Oguzhan Ozyakup's clever reverse pass before blasting past Elliot, but Walters registered with an emphatic finish on the counter three minutes later.

Terim's Turkey held on to the narrow victory and they continue their preparations against Honduras and the United States in the next two weeks, while Ireland face tricky tests against Italy, Costa Rica and Portugal.